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Everything posted by zzzak
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Hallelujah Brothers, I have seen the light and joined the
zzzak replied to zzzak's topic in GENERAL CHAT
By the way Pete I can see why you fucked off, I would have been out of there like a shot. -
Hallelujah Brothers, I have seen the light and joined the
zzzak replied to zzzak's topic in GENERAL CHAT
That was all that I asked for in my original post with the song and I unleashed a pack of humorless Twats, ffs. -
Hallelujah Brothers, I have seen the light and joined the
zzzak replied to zzzak's topic in GENERAL CHAT
I also found a photo of the Earth from the Moon, a real one from 122 miles up, this gives us the correct sizing perspective. 1966 Lunar Orbiter. -
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Lol, are you kidding, from 12 Lunar Astronauts all equipped with Hasselblad 500c cameras we have not one verifiable photo.
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So any photos of the Earth yet, maybe the odd astronaut looked up at the sky and fired off his Hasselblad 500c loaded with Ektachrome 160 ASA and took a photo, you would think that they would wouldn't you ? Come on, at least one of them would have taken a shot of home,
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It means that NASA has been feeding us bullshit since 1969, makes me wonder where all the money has gone. Here's Buckies favorite photo explained. Here’s an admission by Robert Simmon, one of the “visualizers” who “stitched together” Blue Marble II, as related by David Yanofsky in his March 27, 2014 article for Quartz, “The guy who created the iPhone’s Earth image explains why he needed to fake it“: As it turns out, much of what one might assume about this beautiful image is not true…. It isn’t actually a photograph of earth. And that blackness surrounding it? That’s not space, either…. Simmon, a data-visualizer and designer at NASA’s Earth Observatory, created the image in 2002. He told Quartz it’s not a photograph, but a sophisticated visualization. Images of the earth may seem commonplace, but there are actually very few pictures of the entire planet. The problem, Simmon said, is all the NASA earth-observing satellites are in low-earth or geostationary orbit, meaning none of them are far enough away to see a full hemisphere. The most familiar pictures of the entire Earth are from the 1960s and 1970s Apollo missions to the moon. As realistic as it looks, the image is a composite of four months of light data collected in 2,300 km (1,429 mi) wide bands as NASA’s Terra satellite orbited from pole to pole, and the earth rotated beneath it. That data was then stitched together and applied to the surface of a digital ball, then modified in Photoshop. Simmon readily admits there are numerous fakeries in his image. The atmosphere is Photoshop blur. Some of the clouds are collaged together using Photoshop’s clone tool to cover gaps in the satellite’s coverage. The black area around the earth is not the void of space. It is simply a background of black color that Simmon placed the earth on top of. (This is standard practice, Simmon says: most actual “photographs” of the earth—including the Apollo images—present the planet on a black background). Without these alterations, the image wouldn’t look very earth-like. Simmon said he based his manipulations on reality, “in the sense that I’ve looked at a lot of imagery to see how thick should that be, how blue should that be.” But, he later added, “It’s more hyper-realistic than realistic.” “Without these alterations, the image wouldn’t look very earth-like.” That’s a doozy of a sentence, because our visual images of earth all came from NASA in the first place as none of us has flown into space to actually see the entire Earth. Given the admission that Blue Marble II is a fake, we have every reason to wonder about other NASA fakeries and lies, such as the 1986 Challenger explosion (see “Are the crew members of 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger still alive?”) and whether those photos taken on the Moon are real.
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Still no photos of Earth then.
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This from NASA as well. The moon is Earth's closest celestial neighbor, but the two bodies are worlds apart in terms of temperature. The moon's temperature can reach a boiling 250° Fahrenheit (120° Celsius or 400 Kelvin) during lunar daytime at the moon's equator, according to NASA(opens in new tab). Lunar daytime is roughly two Earth-weeks long, since the moon takes a little less than one month – about 27.3 days – to complete one of its days, according to a study published in August 2019 by the Journal of Geophysical Research(opens in new tab). Lunar night time is also about two weeks long, during which the moon's temperature plummets to -208 degrees F (-130° C, 140 K) according to NASA. In certain spots near the moon's poles temperatures can drop even further, reaching - 424° F (- 253°C or 20 K). How did the astronuts survive those temps, they would have been roasted in a very short time, that or frozen solid, c'mon Bucky, tell me more such as where are the stars, what happened to them, did they go out ?
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These unbelievable space images of Earth at night are a bunch of beautiful fakes. So so far we don't have any photos of Earth, the one from 1968 is a well known fake and was even admitted to be that by the NASA employee who made it, as to the ISS that's just another hoax. Here's the ISS in action. Just for laughs here's the Moon lander photo as supplied by NASA. If you watched the background of the clip you would have seen a lot of image analysis going on, that's what you can do with Photoshop, you can tell exactly when the images were produced and modified, so as I said, we don't have a single photo of the Earth, the Moon landing was a hoax and the ISS is another one, show me just one photo that eludes scrutiny.
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Show me a photograph of the Earth then.
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I have embarked on a journey deep into the heart of Indian cooking, it's pretty good so far (4 meals done) and should only get better as the fenugreek and Kashmiri chili powder arrive via eBay, tricky to get some of the ingredients out here but I wouldn't change it for quids, pictures to come. I made this one with 4 eggs and saag rice, that is I put frozen spinach leaves in the rice and mixed it up a bit, that gave me dinner for four nights.
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About 5.30am, no vehicles involved.
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There were two fires, no accidents there.
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